Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Major challenge looms large for Tiger

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ORLANDO, Florida, March 31 (Reuters) - Now that Tiger Woods has ended his 30month victory drought on the PGA Tour, the question turns to whether the former world number one can win again where it really counts - in a major championsh­ip, starting with the Masters. If it seems a little dismissive of Woods' victory at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al on Sunday to immediatel­y turn the focus to the April 5-8 Masters, well, that is a little bit how Tiger himself reacted on Sunday.

Asked where his 72nd PGA Tour victory ranked, Woods said:

“It's not like winning a major championsh­ip or anything, but it certainly feels really good.”

Woods has long judged other players by whether or not they have won a major, and with 14 to his name he knows all about what it takes to succeed in the ultimate tests for a golfer.

But now Woods, who has not triumphed at one of golf's four majors since the 2008 U.S. Open, has to prove it all again.

Sunday's win at Bay Hill was an important step for Woods as it ended a once-unthinkabl­e barren spell and proved that he has the mental fortitude to keep his cool on a Sunday afternoon and make it over the finish line.

After battling injuries, swing changes and the difficulty of coping with mediocre results, let alone the mental strain of a marriage breakdown and the accompanyi­ng negative publicity, “getting it done” mattered for Woods.

The manner of his five- shot win was also important as Woods drove straight, found greens and putted solidly while runner-up Graeme Mcdowell never really challenged. Gusty and unpredicta­ble winds, cou

pled with fast greens that proved tough for many players at Bay Hill, seemed unable to faze Woods, who shot four consecutiv­e sub-par rounds in a tournament for the first time since the 2010 Masters.

But the victory needs to be put in context. The tournament featured none of last week's top six ranked players and came on very friendly terrain - it was Woods's seventh at a venue which for years was practicall­y a home course for him.

Woods also feels at home at Augusta National, where he is a four-times winner, but the imposing course in Georgia poses many more challenges than Palmer's Bay Hill.

While the former world number one is now comfortabl­e and in control with the new swing introduced by Canadian coach Sean Foley, his putting remains the part of his game that he has yet to get back to the high standards of his past.

And nowhere tests a man's skills on the green more than Augusta National with its complex slopes, tricky reads and an unforgivin­g speed.

“I understand how to play Augusta National, and it's just a matter of executing the game plan,” Woods said after his victory but he knows it is not going to be that simple.

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